Where

In August 2008 I went to Bolivia with e3 Partners. e3 works with pastors of local churches to train church
members to invite people in their community to follow Christ. Part of this is the North American teams, who lead teams of
local believers to spend a week talking to people in the neighborhood. One of the nice things about e3 is their value of not just
preaching the Gospel, but of working to disciple people. Matthew 28:19 says “go and make disciples of all
nations...”; it does not say “go and make converts.” Our goal was not to convert people, but to train the local
believers to go and make disciples.

We worked in the province of Beni, in the capital city of Trinidad. We flew into Santa Cruz, took an overnight bus through Beni,
and arrived in Trinidad twelve hours later. Trinidad has
periodic floods, and there is a ring around the city that doubles as
highway and levy. The past two years have seen heavy flooding
in the area. The area is quite poor. Bolivia is the
poorest nation in South America, and while Beni is one of the wealthier
eastern provinces, it is still quite poor. The part of
Trinidad where the church my sub-team worked at probably qualifies as a
slum; it was noticeably poorer than our hotel area. Bolivia has a history of political unrest; until
the 1980s, there was a revolution on average more than once a year. Several years before we went, the eastern provinces had voted
for “Autonomia, Si!”, that is, relative independence from the
socialist-leaning Evo Morales central government. While we
were there, they had protests in Santa Cruz which resulted in a couple
deaths, and we left rather hastily on the last day as it appeared that
they might be setting up road blocks, as people were burning things in
the middle of the highway out of Trinidad. Several weeks after we left, the
situation got so bad that American Airlines halted flights to Santa
Cruz for about a week.

Despite this, however, the people are friendly and open. Centuries of Catholicism have done a lot of pre-evangelism: pretty much everyone believes that God exists, that Jesus is
God, and that we have sinned and deserve punishment. Somehow,
the meaning of Jesus’ death, that he was punished for our sins, instead
of God punishing us, was not communicated. Many times all
that is necessary for a person to become a follower of Christ is simply
to be told. This is quite unlike many areas of the world,
including the U.S., where many people are not convinced that God even
exists, let alone that our sin is serious enough that someone has to
die for it.

What we did

Sharing the Gospel

One of the families that
prayed to received Christ.
(Plus Tatína from the church, holding
one of the children, on the left)

Much
of what we did was going up to the gates of people’s homes and sharing
the gospel. If I was doing the sharing, my translator would
introduce me as from America, I would tell them what God has done in my
life, and ask if I could ask them some questions about their spiritual
life. If they said “si,” as they always did, I would go
through one of e3's tracts, which has a number of questions to lead one
through
the Gospel. If they were Christian, or accepted Christ, I
would ask for prayer requests and pray for them. As much as
possible,
though, I tried to have the Bolivians do the talking.

Training Believers

Although missions trips are usually about the
missionaries doing the work, with e3, our main task was to was to train
the Bolivian church members to do evangelism. We could do a
lot of evangelism in a week, but after that, we are gone. The
Bolivians, on the other hand, will always be there. So our
task was to
model evangelism and discipleship to the Bolivians and to train them to
do likewise. We generally had different church members each day,
so training was a little hard. Some had already been trained in
the evangecube, so if they were willing, I had them share right away,
otherwise I did it first a time or two. As we were walking
to the next house I tried to give some pointers on things that might help
them. Since we generally did not have anyone who had done
discipleship, with us the previous day, I generally modeled the
discipleship, but then spoke about the importance and purpose as we
were walking to the next location.

Evening Meetings

Musical chairs at one of
the evening meetings.

We
had three evening meetings, which were quite different. Before
the first one, the power went out. We prayed for the
power to return, but while we were waiting, we sang childrens’ song in
front of the church with the kids who had come out. By the
time
the power come on ten minutes later, we had about twenty or thirty kids
(no adults), so we did more kid’s stuff. The meeting on
Tuesday
was a regular church meeting, but we organized it. Andy read
through a gospel tract, then I think I spoke briefly (and forgettably,
since I have no idea what I did), then Ky, a teammate from another
group, spoke about why we need to join a community of believers. This was good, since we had a few of the people we talked to
that
evening. The third night, Andy split off with the children,
and I
took the adults. There were a number I did not recognize, and
I
was not sure if they were church members, so I assumed that we might
have some who were new. So I demonstrated briefly how to use
a
Bible (a point Ky had suggested to do when we give out Bibles) and went
through the first little bit of the discipleship materials. I
also went through the back of the evangecube, and spoke briefly about
the importance of loving God and each other, reading the Bible,
praying, being part of a church, and telling others. It
turned
out that everyone was a church member, and I think I took too long
because a lot of people looked kind of bored at the end, but I hope God
used it to model how to do basic discipleship.

Discipleship

One of our goals was to follow up with people who accepted Christ and
to
disciple them. I generally gave a copy of the New Testament
that
we had, explained how to use it, mark and suggest that they
read
the gospel of John. I then went through the first couple
questions of the discipleship sheet we had (a basic Bible
study on
salvation) in order to give them an idea of how to do it and to get
practice looking up verses in the Bible. If we had nationals
who
felt comfortable, I had them do it (this only happened once, but she
was really good). After a few questions, I left the sheet
with
them to do on their own time. Once in a while they had
questions
or concerns which we answered. One of the gals we visited had
been told that she would sacrifice rewards in Heaven if she was not
Catholic. This was kind of hard to answer, because I do not
actually know official Catholic doctrine, but I pointed out verses that
explained that salvation is believing that Jesus died for our sins and
turning from them (Raul helped a lot here, too), and it
seemed to answer her question.

Discipleship
was definitely an area I struggled with, because I did not really know
what a new Christian needs to grow, and the discipleship material
seemed really basic to me. Of course, just because it seems
basic
to me does not mean it is basic to everyone, though. My major
struggle is probably knowing the principles of what they should be
learning, and also the skill of being able to lead them there without
just telling them.

Sharing in schools

This is the senior class
Raul and I presented to

Unlike the U.S., we
were able to share the gospel to a lot of school children. On
one
of the streets we were doing evangelism on, there was an elementary
school. Raul wanted to share the gospel with them, so we went
up
to the front door, asked the teachers if we could, and they brought all
the kids into the front room. So Raul shared the gospel with
the
eternity bracelets, which we then gave to all the kids. I
think
it was the next day that the entire North American team went to a
private school, formerly Catholic but with an evangelical headmaster. Each of us took a classroom and went through the gospel. I
chose the evangecube because it’s more exciting and integrated my
testimony, so that it was not just some theoretical ideas. It
went something like this. Afterwards, Raul lead us in
a group prayer, with those who wanted to praying with us. He
then
had those who had prayed to come to the front and write their name down
on a sheet of paper, which was then given to the headmaster. We
also got a chance to chat with some of the kids (who, in our case, were
seniors).

Anniversary celebration

One of the churches
that e3 had partnered with in a previous year was having their 15 [?]
year
anniversary. So our entire team went to celebrate with them. It was much like a celebration at Austin Chinese Church: worship, a brief message by Pastor Enzo, different groups
that
had been involved with the church did a musical number (our
performance was quite ad
hoc,
as we had no idea that we were going to be asked to perform), and then
refreshments. The peanut drink was made by boiling peanuts,
so it
was safe to drink and I had some. Interesting flavor, with an
almost citrus taste, but with a strong, yet mild, taste of peanuts.